Paint



Fis

tains, usually 'si li ca,alumina,lime,an'dother v I UNITED STATESoLAYTouL: BAKER AND MATHIAS T'H'ORKELSONL," or MOLINE, ILLINOIS.

PAT Nr OFFICE;

'- SPECIFICATION forming part of. Letters Patent'No. 42$,e5e, datedMarch s, 1890.

' Application filed DecemberIS, 1889. s ts ITO-333,652. (No specimens.)v. r

,1 {Improvement in Paint, of which the following 'Our improved paint isparticularly adapted ';-for priming or first coat of wood and iron work;and it consistseof thefollowing ingre,

dients, compounded in the manner and about .the proportions stated, thatis to say: .We take of raw linseed-oil; thirty-six parts {lamp-black.

-nine parts; coachq'dpameleven parts; turf 5 T pentin e, twenty-twoparts; iron-ore or mineral paint, one hundred parts; and afterthoroughly mixing said ingredients we allow the mass to-stand for a.ti1nesay twelve hours-- *and then "grind in an ordinary paint-mill. vIrhe iron-ore or mineral paint is a natural product, which is well knownand which con;

fingrefdients in varying proportions.

v r v Y W v be smoothed bysand-paper or mother wayswithout injury orwithout rubbing off; 3

Weclaim- V v I The herein-described paint, composed of rawlinseed-oilylamp-black, coaqhjgpan, tunpentine, and natural-mineralpaint, in about the proportions .stated', substantially as described. I1;:

i it CLAYTON L. BAKER.

f MATHIAS" THORKELSON.

qwitnes sesz;

ELMER E. MORGAN;

W. E KRATZER.

